arts & entertainment Journey Of A Crypto-Jew Suzanne Chessler Contributing Writer C onsuelo Luz brings her music, with a concert titled "The Journey of a Crypto Jew," to a Michigan stage for the first time Sunday, May 22, at Temple Shir Shalom in West Bloomfield, sponsored by the Cohn-Haddow Center for Jewish Studies at Wayne State University. A Crypto-Jew refers to some- one who professed one faith openly and his or her Jewish faith secretly. In Luz's case, her mother came from a converso family forcibly converted to Catholicism 500 years ago during the Inquisition while through the years never forgetting their Jewish heritage. "I will be doing mostly Sephardic songs, but there will be some of my original music as well',' says Luz, 62, a singer-song- writer based in New Mexico. "I've brought songs into a contemporary style with fla- menco influences." Luz, who plays guitar and charango (a stringed instrument of the lute fam- ily), will be appearing with flamenco guitarist Joaquin Gallegos and cellist Nelson Denman for the John M. Haddow Memorial Program in Jewish Culture. Her selections range from "To You, My God, My Desire a prayer adaptation, to "Home," an original piece connecting Judaism to nature. Adaptations move Jewish prayers and ballads from Spain, the Mediterranean and the Middle East into the spectrum of world music. "Whatever I do is imbued with classi- cal sounds I learned taking piano lessons and with South American folk rhythms I learned in different countries," she says. "What I do musically reflects the journey of Sephardic Jews [from Spain to other parts of the world]." Although Luz established her musical career later in life, after a divorce and her children were grown, she looks back to her heritage and early years for foundation. Born in New York, she traces Chilean roots through her mother and Cuban roots through her father, who worked for the United Nations and brought the family with him to assignments in Greece, the Philippines, Spain, Italy and Peru. "Classical music was frustrating for me because that was not who I was meant to be musically:' she explains. "When I was 14, I went to Chile to visit my mother's family, and an aunt taught me my first Chords on guitar. I left piano and classical music behind and started learning South American folk songs." Luz returned to New York when she was 18, after studying Spanish literature in an overseas program offered in Lima by Cambridge University. Back in America, her studies were focused on literature and music at the New School for Social Research and on drama at the Stella Adler Studio. While living in New York, Luz did some street theater and sang in independent and commercial films, learning cinema- editing skills in tandem with performing. After a brief marriage and with a young child, she decided to move to New Mexico, where she married a Jewish man and raised her own three children and a stepson. "Neither of my parents practiced reli- gion although my mother has Jewish heri- tage," she says. "I had a Columbian nanny, and my parents went along with my sister, brother and I being raised Catholic by the nanny. "My parents thought religion would enrich our lives, and I took to it because I'm spiritually oriented. "I was brought into Judaism because my husband was Jewish, and I started sing- ing at temple. I wanted to explore Judaism more, but it wasn't until I divorced that I decided to convert. I wanted to learn and read Hebrew and understand the.power of the Hebrew letters:" After being part of a large synagogue, Luz gave her attention to HaMakom, a smaller and more progressive congrega- tion. Her conversion involved a two-year process with 11 women studying together for b'not mitzvah. "About 25 years ago, a rabbi who knew I was a singer lent me a book of prayer with the music noted:' Luz recalls."I discovered the passages were Sephardic and found them beautiful and powerful. I sang them in temples and at local gatherings, made recordings and started to travel interna- tionally to concerts." Religious recordings include Dezeo and Adio, which feature ancient Sephardic prayers and love ballads. Her original songs are found on Missing Water and Yo Se Que Yo Amo. Individual tracks have been placed on compilation recordings, including A Jewish Odyssey. "Emotions inspire the songs I write,' explains Luz, who appeared in the film The music of Consuelo Luz captures her experiences traveling the world and deepening her spirituality through Judaism. The Milagro Beanfield War, directed by Robert Redford. "My most recent songs were written while I was in Guatemala doing research for a book I'm writing. "I was sitting by a beautiful lake, and the songs started forming because I felt connected to the lake. I thought of the importance of water in our lives and wrote the words before adding the music. Sometimes, the melodies come first:" The book, which she sometimes con- siders a detour from her music projects, is a novel about the power of sound and Jewish and Mayan mysticism. Connecting to nature holds an impor- tant role in Luz's time away from work — hiking in the mountains, biking and even raising chickens. "I can write music at the piano, guitar or charango," she says. "I feel a special connection to the singing and music at the small congregation where I belong." II Consuelo Luz performs 2 p.m. Sunday, May 22, at Temple Shir Shalom, 3999 Walnut Lake Road, in West Bloomfield. $15-$18 in advance; $25 at door. (313) 577-2679; cohnhaddowcenter@wayne.edu . May 19 g 2011 117